Frontiers in Plant Science (Apr 2020)

Protein Phosphorylation Dynamics Under Carbon/Nitrogen-Nutrient Stress and Identification of a Cell Death-Related Receptor-Like Kinase in Arabidopsis

  • Xingwen Li,
  • Miho Sanagi,
  • Yu Lu,
  • Yuko Nomura,
  • Sara Christina Stolze,
  • Shigetaka Yasuda,
  • Yusuke Saijo,
  • Waltraud X. Schulze,
  • Regina Feil,
  • Mark Stitt,
  • John E. Lunn,
  • Hirofumi Nakagami,
  • Hirofumi Nakagami,
  • Takeo Sato,
  • Junji Yamaguchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.00377
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

Nutrient availability, in particular the availability of sugar [carbon (C)] and nitrogen (N), is important for the regulation of plant metabolism and development. In addition to independent utilization of C and N nutrients, plants sense and respond to the balance of C and N nutrients (C/N-nutrient) available to them. High C/low N-nutrient stress has been shown to arrest early post-germinative growth while promoting progression to senescence in Arabidopsis. Although several signaling components of the C/N-nutrient response have been identified, the inclusive molecular basis of plant C/N-nutrient response remains unclear. This proteome analysis evaluated phosphorylation dynamics in response to high C/low N-nutrient stress. Phosphoproteomics under conditions of C/N-nutrient stress showed a global change in the phosphorylation status of proteins, including plasma membrane H+-ATPase, carbon and nitrogen metabolic enzymes and signaling proteins such as protein kinases and transcription factors. Further analyses suggested that SNF1-related protein kinase 1 (SnRK1) is involved in primary C/N-nutrient signal mediation via the transcriptional regulation of C/N-regulatory kinases. We also identified a leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase with extracellular malectin-like domain, named as LMK1, which was shown to possess cell death induction activity in plant leaves. These results provide important insight into the C/N-nutrient signaling pathways connecting nutrition stress to various cellular and physiological processes in plants.

Keywords